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A top NHL superstar has New York in his sights and the move isn't far off

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Jonathan Ouimet
June 1, 2026  (1:50)
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New York Rangers
Photo credit: Screenshot

The New York Rangers just got name-dropped in the biggest off-season rumor in hockey.

Marc-Olivier Beaudoin reported on X that the Rangers are on Connor McDavid's very short list of destinations he would consider waiving his no-move clause to join.

Montreal is reportedly the other name on that list. A few others remain unnamed. But the Rangers showing up is the part Madison Square Garden didn't know it needed this week.

Beaudoin was careful with his framing. He's not saying McDavid has made a decision. He's not saying a trade has been requested. He's saying that if McDavid ever wants out of Edmonton, New York is one of the few places he'd actually entertain.

That's a heavy implication for a franchise looking for direction. The Rangers finished 29th overall at 34-39-9 with 77 points. The fall from contender to bottom-five team happened fast. Chris Drury's group needs an identity.

McDavid would be exactly that identity. The 29-year-old just authored a 138-point regular season. 48 goals. 90 assists. On a $12.5 million cap hit. The kind of production no contender chases through trade markets without going all in.

What McDavid would actually do for the New York Rangers

Mike Sullivan inherited a roster with real pieces last summer. Adam Fox at $9.5 million from the back end. Mika Zibanejad with 78 points across 81 games. Igor Shesterkin at $11.5 million in net with a 0.911 save percentage.

Plug McDavid into the middle of that group and the entire conversation flips. The Rangers go from rebuilding question mark to immediate Stanley Cup contender in a single signature.

Zibanejad's minus-20 rating tells you what's missing. The Rangers can't drive offensive zone time consistently. McDavid is the player who solves that problem better than anyone since Wayne Gretzky.

Alexis Lafreniere is 24 years old and finished with 57 points on a $7.45 million cap hit. The fit on McDavid's wing would be the kind of move that unlocks a player who's been searching for one star center to follow.

Madison Square Garden has been waiting for a generational arrival for decades. The Rangers haven't had a Hart Trophy winner since Mark Messier in 1992. The Stanley Cup parade still ends in 1994. The market is starving.

McDavid becomes an unrestricted free agent on July 1, 2028. That's the runway. The Oilers have two more years to convince him to stay. The Rangers have two more years to convince him New York is the next stop.

I had some very interesting discussions last week, but I was waiting for the dust to settle before sharing them. I was confirmed that in the event of a situation where Connor McDavid wanted to leave Edmonton, the #CH would be on his very short list of a few teams where he would agree to be traded. Or to sign if he reaches full autonomy on July 1, 2028. When he came to Montreal for the F1 Grand Prix, he took the opportunity to visit certain neighborhoods in Brossard and Westmount. Montreal and New York (Rangers) would therefore be two of the few places he would consider. Wrote reporter Marc-Olivier Beaudoin.

Pierre LeBrun reported earlier this week that McDavid and Auston Matthews both still haven't made final determinations on their futures. LeBrun believes both will stay put for at least one more year.

That gives Chris Drury time to clean up the Rangers roster. The cap structure needs work. The defensive system under Sullivan needs another full season to settle. The runway to actually being attractive to a player like McDavid runs through 2026-27 results.

Honestly, this is the kind of rumor that doesn't usually materialize. Most generational players never actually leave the franchises that drafted them. But McDavid keeps reaching another level every year, and the Oilers keep falling short in the playoffs.

The Rangers can't force anything. They can build a roster worth choosing. The phone call comes from the player's camp when it comes. New York just learned they might be on the dialing end of it.